11/2 California Uber Alles is such a great song
\_ Yes, and it was written about Jerry Brown. I was thinking this
as I cast my vote for Meg Whitman. I am independent, but I
typically vote Democrat (e.g., I voted for Boxer). However, I
can't believe we elected this retread.
\_ You voted for the billionaire that ran HP into the ground
...

5/26 "China could join moves to sanction North Korea"
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100526/ap_on_re_as/as_clinton_south_korea
How did Hillary manage to do that when we're also asking China to
concede on the economic front at the same time?
\_ China doesn't want NK to implode. NK is a buffer between SK and
China, or in other words a large buffer between a strong US ally and
...

2/18 If not 0 then 1 - wasn't that the basis of the logic of the bush
administration on torture? If we do it, it's legal, and since
torture is illegal, therefore we don't torture?
\_ Bush is a great computer scientist.
\_ He must be, given that he defeated the inventor of the Internet
and AlGorithm.
...

1/20 So I want to give some money to Haiti relief funds and my employer
\_ SOCIALISM
is willing to match it, but I am not really that big a fan of
The Red Cross (they take your donations and then spend them
however they like, not neccessarily on what you gave it to them for).
Who else is a good charity? UNICEF?
...

1/20 So I want to give some money to Haiti relief funds and my employer
is willing to match it, but I am not really that big a fan of
The Red Cross (they take your donations and then spend them
however they like, not neccessarily on what you gave it to them for).
Who else is a good charity? UNICEF?
\- I believe after some criticism the Red Cross is better about
...

Cache (4826 bytes)

www.nytimes.com/2010/04/28/books/28laura.html?no_interstitialLaura Bush has finally opened up publicly about the mysterious car accident she had when she was 17, a crash that claimed the life of a high school friend on a dark country road in Midland, Tex.
Laura Bush In her new book, "Spoken From the Heart," Mrs Bush describes in vivid detail the circumstances surrounding the crash, which has haunted her for most of her adult life and which became the subject of questions and speculation when it was revealed during her husband's first presidential run. A copy of the book, scheduled for release in early May, was obtained by The New York Times at a bookstore. On several occasions in the book, Mrs Bush admonishes her husband's political adversaries for "calling him names," and she pointedly rebuts criticism of some of his key decisions.
Hurricane Katrina was in the best interests of the victims and aid workers on the ground. "He did not want one single life to be lost because someone was catering to the logistical requirements of a president," she says about the Katrina fly-over. "He did not want his convoy of vehicles to block trucks delivering water or food or medical supplies, or to impede National Guardsmen from around the nation who were arriving to help." Mrs Bush also suggests, apparently for the first time, that she, Mr Bush, and several members of their staff may have been poisoned during a visit to Germany for a G8 Summit. They all became mysteriously sick, and the president was bedridden for part of the trip. The Secret Service investigated the possibility they were poisoned, she writes, but doctors could only conclude that they all contracted a virus. After noting several high-profile poisonings, she wrote, "we never learned if any other delegations became ill, or if ours, mysteriously, was the only one."
Nancy Pelosi, the Democrat who is speaker of the House of Representatives, for calling Mr Bush "an incompetent leader" and for saying he lacked judgment, knowledge and experience.
Harry Reid, quoting him as calling her husband a "loser" and a "liar." "The comments were uncalled for and graceless," she writes. "While a president's political opponents, as well as his supporters, are entitled to make what they see as legitimate criticisms, and while our national debates should be spirited, these particular words revealed the petty and parochial nature of some who serve in Congress." But it is her description of the deadly accident, and its subsequent impact on her life and her faith, that is the subject Mrs Bush had most shied away from speaking about in her public life. On a November night in 1963, Mrs Bush and a girlfriend were hurrying to a drive-in theater when Mrs Bush, at the wheel of her father's Chevy Impala, ran a stop sign on a small road and smashed into a car being driven by Mike Douglas, a star athlete and popular student at her school. "In those awful seconds, the car door must have been flung open by the impact and my body rose in the air until gravity took over and I was pulled, hard and fast, back to earth," she says. "The whole time," she adds later, "I was praying that the person in the other car was alive. Mrs Bush concedes that she and her friend were chatting when she ran the stop sign. But she also suggests a host of factors beyond her control played a role -- the pitch-black road, an unusually dangerous intersection, the small size of the stop sign, and the car the victim was driving.
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration went so far as to investigate the Corvair's handling, but it didn't reach the same grim conclusions. I was driving my dad's much larger and heavier Chevy Impala. But none of that would ever ease the night of November 6 Not for me, and never for the Douglases." Mrs Bush reveals that she was wracked by guilt for years after the crash, especially after not attending the funeral and for not reaching out to the parents of the dead teenager. Her parents did not want her to show up at the funeral, she states, and she ended up sleeping through it. "I lost my faith that November, lost it for many, many years," she says. "It was the first time that I had prayed to God for something, begged him for something, not the simple childhood wishing on a star but humbly begging for another human life. My begging, to my seventeen-year-old mind, had made no difference. The only answer was the sound of Mrs Douglas's sobs on the other side of that thin emergency room curtain." Mrs Bush goes on to say that in her public life, she has encouraged young drivers who have been in serious accidents to speak to loved ones, counselors or spiritual or pastoral advisers. "But while I give this advice in my letters, I didn't do any of that," she reveals. "Most of how I ultimately coped with the crash was by trying not to talk about it, not to think about it, to put it aside.